Anonymous wrote:I notice we lose families from our church who were previously very involved and in the fabric of that community all but disappear when their kids start to play travel sports. It's sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least with travel sports you have a community of people with something in common. I have nothing in common with my neighbors, other than living on the same street.
But you’ll never find those commonalities if you’re away watching your kid play a meaningless tournament every weekend. Local community is the bread and butter of healthy societies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least with travel sports you have a community of people with something in common. I have nothing in common with my neighbors, other than living on the same street.
But you’ll never find those commonalities if you’re away watching your kid play a meaningless tournament every weekend. Local community is the bread and butter of healthy societies.
Anonymous wrote:At least with travel sports you have a community of people with something in common. I have nothing in common with my neighbors, other than living on the same street.
Anonymous wrote:Travel sports are bad for families. They take a great deal of time and resources away from the rest of the family. My son played a sport through high school. Never did travel.
He went to a division, one school on a scholarship
Anonymous wrote:Travel sports are bad for families. They take a great deal of time and resources away from the rest of the family. My son played a I
sport through high school. Never did travel.
He went to a division, one school on a scholarship
Anonymous wrote:Community bonding? Do you have older children/tweens/teens?
Many kids - if left completely unscheduled- will spend their free time looking at their screens be it bingeing shows, social media or gaming (which one could argue is a community too). Sounds like OP envisions all the travel players hanging in the neighborhood, volunteering, helping neighbors- stuff that sounds great but let’s be realistic. If your kid is completely unscheduled and does these things, then you’ve def done something right!
A little scheduling goes a long way in giving kids some structure, interaction with kids they wouldn’t normally hang with, and either physical or brain activity. And gets them off screens!
What’s wrong if travel sports becomes that activity?
Yeah, weird on a sports message board there’s been a lot of negativity towards travel sports and parents who enjoy watching their kids play sports.
What gives?